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THE ENVION CASE – THE BATTLEFIELDS, THE PARTIES, AND INVESTORS PROTECTION

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Let’s talk about Investors Protection, please


Envion Investors Protection issues
Investors Protection Issues

German Edition availableMuch has already been written about the complicated ENVION case. Given the current situation, it seems that ENVION could develop into a role model and a case study for “how to develop a valid investors protection approach” in the crypto-investment space. From our point of view, investors protection has not been mentioned too often in the ongoing discussion which is focused primarily on the shareholder battle. But, as a matter of fact, ENVION raised money from more than 30,000 people worldwide. Currently, these investors are the victims of a shareholder battle.  Due to the lack of and incorrect information in the white paper, ICO investors had no way of recognizing that there were several shareholder groups in the Envion that could get into conflict.

In the meantime,  these investors started to join forces and along with an investors’ telegram channel, the website www.envion-investors.org went online. This seems a valid approach and from our point of view the only reasonable way to make the rights of the EVN token investors heard in this mess. As telegram channels are used heavily in selling tokens worldwide, we think it is more than adequate that the same social media channels are used to organize the disappointed investors.

EVN token holders will find it difficult to assert their rights anyway. From our point of view, token holders should also be seen as investors who must be protected.

The Envion Battlefields


The Envion BattlefieldsFor the purpose of an efficient discussion in this complicated ENVION case we should try to structure the topics to discuss and identify the individual battlefields. In our view, these two battlefields are

  • the Shareholder Dispute Battlefield, i.e. the dispute between the two founder teams
  • the Investors Protection Battlefield, i.e. the legal claims of the ICO investors/ EVN token-holders

Currently, it looks as if the people around the ENVION AG CEO Matthias WOESTMANN are the bad actors on the “Shareholder Dispute Battlefield“. Apparently, they have a respective track record and are experienced corporate raiders. WOESTMANN and his partners may have tricked the founders around TRADO GmbH and Michael LUCKOW. Actually, it’s up to the courts to decide on that in the weeks, months, or years to come. It’s a battle between the two shareholder groups.

At the “Investors Claims Battlefield“, however, we see both shareholder groups in a joint liability against ENVION ICO investors and EVN token-holders.

Evidently the prospectus – the legal basis for their investment – contained false and misleading information. Probably the most important piece of misleading information in the prospectus was that the management of ENVION AG pretended that all assets necessary to reach the promised business goals are at the disposition (owned by) ENVION AG.

Now it is evident that neither the smart contract for the token sale nor the IP rights for the MMU ever have been at the disposition of the management of ENVION. ICO investors have been misled and lured into an empty shell. The investment prospectus was false as was the white paper and the public announcements across the different ENVION social media channels. All those different elements of public communication created a “false and misleading picture” for ICO investors/EVN token-holders.

At least, the evident advertising gag  … we are a compliant ICO by issuing a prospectus … will result in an prospectus liability for the management team of ENVION AG. Moreover, however, everyone involved in the project is responsible for making false or misleading statements in public. With investors protection as the guiding principle, we see a legal responsibility of both founding teams here. Pointing at each other will not change anything for investors and the courts on the “Investors Protection Battlefield“.

What about the promised transparency?


ENVION wanted to be a different ICO, a transparent project and company. Sounded promising because investors protection starts with transparency in the first place. As Nathanial POPPER in his NYT article rightfully reminded us, it was one of ENVION’s key messages to potential investors to be different from those many other dodgy ICOs. In one of its many promotional posts on Medium, the Envion team wrote:

As financial regulators across the globe look to regulate I.C.O.s and protect investors, Envion serves as a model for a compliant crowdsale that operates with the same transparency and integrity of traditional financial markets.

Well, it, unfortunately, turned out that ENVION exactly was the opposite of a transparent project. The TRADO-founders around Michael LUCKOW initially hid in the dark and Matthias WOESTMANN, a former journalist and investment letter publisher, ran the show. Despite being labeled a compliant ICO “made in Germany” it turned out that the quality of ENVION’s public papers – white paper and prospectus – had the very same poor transparency level as many of the criticised offshore ICO scams.

In the course of the ICO, the ENVION team disclosed a lot of information to convince potential investors. Those pieces of information published on its website, on its Medium channel (followed by 4.8k people), in its white paper, and in the prospectus, turned out to be substantially wrong. Let’s try to establish a list of issues associated with ENVION’s public statements:
[table id=8 /] Many people worked on the vehicle ENVION and everyone knew (or had to know) about the status and condition of the vehicle when the ICO was started. From an investor’s point of view, it is an unjustifiable simplification to blame the driver only, now that the vehicle crashed because of fatal construction problems.

  1. Lian Breitenbach says:

    Do you seriously want to call von der Osten, Freifrau von Falkenhausen and van Aubel “founders”? People who stole the company and have nothing to do with envion, the ICO or the business model?

    1. Charlene says:

      Hi there, that’s not the point here. We agree that the people around Woestmann may have raided the other founders. Unfortunately, the public information in the prospectus/white paper/social media always presented Woestmann as the founder. Trado and Luckow came out of the blue in May 2018 only and suddenly presented themselves as the “founders” which they may be. But our point was that investors should have been informed in the public papers about the whole situation around the founders. Now investors are contronted with “new founders” claiming to be the “real founders” holding the company’s assets and Woestmann is just a corporate raider. Investors are confronted with a completely new situation created by the lack of transparency provided by both founder teams. At least this is our point of view.

  2. Vitalik Howey says:

    Oh, the case is quite easy. DYODD: Do your own due diligence.

    When reading and watching the presented documents, watching the history of the “company”, and “founders”, you could only come to one conclusion: this tram and project was not credible.

    But when someone claims to provide a 161% ROI, they are not only lying, but idiots.

    This thing was an bunch of naive amateurs, some even with bad intent, not even a team and their crappy vehicle fell apart before hitting the road.

    They should have teamed up with Savedroid, the other idiot in Germany, who tries to play smartass.

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